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1.
Szilvia Z. Tóth 《BBA》2005,1708(2):275-282
The effects of DCMU (3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea) on the fluorescence induction transient (OJIP) in higher plants were re-investigated. We found that the initial (F0) and maximum (FM) fluorescence levels of DCMU-treated leaves do not change relative to controls when the treatment is done in complete darkness and DCMU is allowed to diffuse slowly into the leaves either by submersion or by application via the stem. Simultaneous 820 nm transmission measurements (a measure of electron flow through Photosystem I) showed that in the DCMU-treated samples, the plastoquinone pool remained oxidized during the light pulses whereas in uninhibited leaves, the FM level coincided with a fully reduced electron transport chain. The identical FM values with and without DCMU indicate that in intact leaves, the FM value is independent of the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. We also show that (i) the generally observed F0 increase is probably due to the presence of (even very weak) light during the DCMU treatment, (ii) vacuum infiltration of leaf discs leads to a drastic decrease of the fluorescence yield, and in DCMU-treated samples, the FM decreases to the I-level of their control (leaves vacuum infiltrated with 1% ethanol), (iii) and in thylakoid membranes, the addition of DCMU lowers the FM relative to that of a control sample.  相似文献   

2.
Twenty-five years ago, non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence by oxidised plastoquinone (PQ) was proposed to be responsible for the lowering of the maximum fluorescence yield reported to occur when leaves or chloroplasts were treated in the dark with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), an inhibitor of electron flow beyond the primary quinone electron acceptor (Q(A)) of photosystem (PS) II. Since then, the notion of PQ-quenching has received support but has also been put in doubt, due to inconsistent experimental findings. In the present study, the possible role of the native PQ-pool as a non-photochemical quencher was reinvestigated, employing measurements of the fast chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics (from 50 micros to 5 s). The about 20% lowering of the maximum fluorescence yield F(M), observed in osmotically broken spinach chloroplasts treated with DCMU, was eliminated when the oxidised PQ-pool was non-photochemically reduced to PQH(2) by dark incubation of the samples in the presence of NAD(P)H, both under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Incubation under anaerobic conditions in the absence of NAD(P)H had comparatively minor effects. In DCMU-treated samples incubated in the presence of NAD(P)H fluorescence quenching started to develop again after 20-30 ms of illumination, i.e., the time when PQH(2) starts getting reoxidized by PS I activity. NAD(P)H-dependent restoration of F(M) was largely, if not completely, eliminated when the samples were briefly (5 s) pre-illuminated with red or far-red light. Addition to the incubation medium of HgCl(2) that inhibits dark reduction of PQ by NAD(P)H also abolished NAD(P)H-dependent restoration of F(M). Collectively, our results provide strong new evidence for the occurrence of PQ-quenching. The finding that DCMU alone did not affect the minimum fluorescence yield F(0) allowed us to calculate, for different redox states of the native PQ-pool, the fractional quenching at the F(0) level (Q(0)) and to compare it with the fractional quenching at the F(M) level (Q(M)). The experimentally determined Q(0)/Q(M) ratios were found to be equal to the corresponding F(0)/F(M) ratios, demonstrating that PQ-quenching is solely exerted on the excited state of antenna chlorophylls.  相似文献   

3.
Irina Grouneva 《BBA》2009,1787(7):929-5353
Intact cells of diatoms are characterized by a rapid diatoxanthin epoxidation during low light periods following high light illumination while epoxidation is severely restricted in phases of complete darkness. The present study shows that rapid diatoxanthin epoxidation is dependent on the availability of the cofactor of diatoxanthin epoxidase, NADPH, which cannot be generated in darkness due to the inactivity of PSI. In the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum, NADPH production during low light is dependent on PSII activity, and addition of DCMU consequently abolishes diatoxanthin epoxidation. In contrast to P. tricornutum, DCMU does not affect diatoxanthin epoxidation in Cyclotella meneghiniana, which shows the same rapid epoxidation in low light both in the absence or presence of DCMU. Measurements of the reduction state of the PQ pool and PSI activity indicate that, in the presence of DCMU, NADPH production in C. meneghiniana occurs via alternative electron transport, which includes electron donation from the chloroplast stroma to the PQ pool and, in a second step, from PQ to PSI. Similar electron flow to PQ is also observed during high light illumination of DCMU-treated P. tricornutum cells. In contrast to C. meneghiniana, the electrons are not directed to PSI, but most likely to a plastoquinone oxidase. This chlororespiratory electron transport leads to the establishment of an uncoupler-sensitive proton gradient in the presence of DCMU, which induces diadinoxanthin de-epoxidation and NPQ. In C. meneghiniana, electron flow to the plastoquinone oxidase is restricted, and consequently, diadinoxanthin de-epoxidation and NPQ is not observed after addition of DCMU.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of elevated temperature on electron flow to plastoquinone pool and to PSI from sources alternative to PSII was studied in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and maize (Zea mays L.) leaves. Alternative electron flow was characterized by measuring variable fluorescence of chlorophyll and absorption changes at 830 nm that reflect redox changes of P700, the primary electron donor of PSI. The treatment of leaves with elevated temperature resulted in a transient increase in variable fluorescence after cessation of actinic light. This increase was absent in leaves treated with methyl viologen (MV). The kinetics of P700+ reduction in barley and maize leaves treated with DCMU and MV exhibited two exponential components. The rate of both components markedly increased with temperature of the heat pretreatment of leaves when the reduction of P700+ was measured after short (1 s) illumination of leaves. The acceleration of both kinetic components of P700+ reduction by high-temperature treatment was much less pronounced when P700+ reduction rate was measured after illumination of leaves for 1 min. Since the treatment of leaves with DCMU and MV inhibited both the electron flow to PSI from PSII and ferredoxin-dependent cycling of electrons around PSI, the accelerated reduction of P700+ indicated that high temperature treatment activated electron flow to PSII from reductants localized in the chloroplast stroma. We conclude that the lesser extent of activation of this process by elevated temperature after prolonged illumination of heat-inhibited leaves is caused by depletion of the pool stromal reductants in light due to photoinduced electron transfer from these reductants to oxygen.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the temperature dependence of chlorophyll fluorescence intensity in barley leaves under weak and actinic light excitation during linear heating from room temperature to 50 degrees C. The heat-induced fluorescence rise usually appearing at around 40-50 degrees C under weak light excitation was also found in leaves treated with 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) or hydroxylamine (NH(2)OH). However, simultaneous treatment with both these compounds caused a disappearance of the fluorescence rise. We have suggested that the mechanism of the heat-induced fluorescence rise in DCMU-treated leaves is different than that in untreated or NH(2)OH-treated leaves. In DCMU-treated leaves, the heat-induced fluorescence rise reflects an accumulation of Q(A) (-) even under weak light excitation due to the thermal inhibition of the S(2)Q(A) (-) recombination as was further documented by a decrease in the intensity of the thermoluminescence Q band. Mathematical model simulating this experimental data also supports our interpretation. In the case of DCMU-untreated leaves, our model simulations suggest that the heat-induced fluorescence rise is caused by both the light-induced reduction of Q(A) and enhanced back electron transfer from Q(B) to Q(A). The simulations also revealed the importance of other processes occurring during the heat-induced fluorescence rise, which are discussed with respect to experimental data.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Experiments were carried out to identify a process co-determining with Q(A) the fluorescence rise between F(0) and F(M). With 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), the fluorescence rise is sigmoidal, in its absence it is not. Lowering the temperature to -10°C the sigmoidicity is lost. It is shown that the sigmoidicity is due to the kinetic overlap between the reduction kinetics of Q(A) and a second process; an overlap that disappears at low temperature because the temperature dependences of the two processes differ. This second process can still relax at -60°C where recombination between Q(A)(-) and the donor side of photosystem (PS) II is blocked. This suggests that it is not a redox reaction but a conformational change can explain the data. Without DCMU, a reduced photosynthetic electron transport chain (ETC) is a pre-condition for reaching the F(M). About 40% of the variable fluorescence relaxes in 100ms. Re-induction while the ETC is still reduced takes a few ms and this is a photochemical process. The fact that the process can relax and be re-induced in the absence of changes in the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool implies that it is unrelated to the Q(B)-occupancy state and PQ-pool quenching. In both +/-DCMU the process studied represents ~30% of the fluorescence rise. The presented observations are best described within a conformational protein relaxation concept. In untreated leaves we assume that conformational changes are only induced when Q(A) is reduced and relax rapidly on re-oxidation. This would explain the relationship between the fluorescence rise and the ETC-reduction.  相似文献   

8.
A modified fluorescence microscope system was used to measure chlorophyll fluorescence and delayed light emission from mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in situ in fresh-cut sections from leaves of Panicum miliaceum L. The fluorescence rise in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated leaves and the slow fluorescence kinetics in untreated leaves show that mesophyll chloroplasts have larger photosystem II unit sizes than do bundle sheath chloroplasts. The larger photosystem II units imply more efficient noncyclic electron transport in mesophyll chloroplasts. Quenching of slow fluorescence also differs between the cell types with mesophyll chloroplasts showing complex kinetics and bundle sheath chloroplasts showing a relatively simple decline. Properties of the photosynthetic system were also investigated in leaves from plants grown in soil containing elevated NaCl levels. As judged by changes in both fluorescence kinetics in DCMU-treated leaves and delayed light emission in leaves not exposed to DCMU, salinity altered photosystem II in bundle sheath cells but not in mesophyll cells. This result may indicate different ionic distributions in the two cell types or, alternatively, different responses of the two chloroplast types to environmental change.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism by which state 1-state 2 transitions in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 are controlled was investigated by examining the effects of a variety of chemical and illumination treatments which modify the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. The extent to which these treatments modify excitation energy distribution was determined by 77K fluorescence emission spectroscopy. It was found that treatment which lead to the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 1 whereas treatments which lead to the reduction of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 2. We therefore propose that state transitions in cyanobacteria are triggered by changes in the redox state of plastoquinone or a closely associated electron carrier. Alternative proposals have included control by the extent of cyclic electron transport around PS I and control by localised electrochemical gradients around PS I and PS II. Neither of these proposals is consistent with the results reported here.Abbreviations DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DQH2 duroquinol (tetramethyl-p-hydroquinone) - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of PS II - Light 1 light predominantly exciting PS I - Light 2 light predominantly exciting PS II - M.V. methyl viologen - PS photosystem  相似文献   

10.
Stomatal conductance (gs) typically declines in response to increasing intercellular CO2 concentration (ci). However, the mechanisms underlying this response are not fully understood. Recent work suggests that stomatal responses to ci and red light (RL) are linked to photosynthetic electron transport. We investigated the role of photosynthetic electron transport in the stomatal response to ci in intact leaves of cocklebur (Xanthium strumarium) plants by examining the responses of gs and net CO2 assimilation rate to ci in light and darkness, in the presence and absence of the photosystem II inhibitor 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), and at 2% and 21% ambient oxygen. Our results indicate that (1) gs and assimilation rate decline concurrently and with similar spatial patterns in response to DCMU; (2) the response of gs to ci changes slope in concert with the transition from Rubisco- to electron transport-limited photosynthesis at various irradiances and oxygen concentrations; (3) the response of gs to ci is similar in darkness and in DCMU-treated leaves, whereas the response in light in non-DCMU-treated leaves is much larger and has a different shape; (4) the response of gs to ci is insensitive to oxygen in DCMU-treated leaves or in darkness; and (5) stomata respond normally to RL when ci is held constant, indicating the RL response does not require a reduction in ci by mesophyll photosynthesis. Together, these results suggest that part of the stomatal response to ci involves the balance between photosynthetic electron transport and carbon reduction either in the mesophyll or in guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Wilson KE  Król M  Huner NP 《Planta》2003,217(4):616-627
When cells of the green alga Chlorella vulgaris Beij. are transferred from growth at 5 degrees C and an irradiance of 150 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1) to 27 degrees C and the same irradiance, they undergo what is normally considered a high-light to low-light phenotypic change. This involves a 3-fold increase in cellular chlorophyll content with a concomitant increase in light-harvesting complex polypeptide levels. This process appears to occur in response to the cellular capacity to utilize the products of photosynthesis, with the redox state of the plastoquinone pool sensing the cellular energy balance. The phenotypic adjustment can be enhanced or blocked using chemical inhibitors that modulate the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. The functional changes in the photosynthetic apparatus that occurred during the high-light to low-light acclimation were examined with special consideration paid to the paradox that 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated cells, with non-functional photosystem II (PSII), accumulate light-harvesting polypeptides. At the structural and basic functional levels, the light-harvesting complex of the cells treated with DCMU was indistinguishable from that of the untreated, control cells. To examine how PSII was protected in the DCMU-treated cells, we measured the content of xanthophyll-cycle pigments. It appeared that a zeaxanthin-dependent nonphotochemical quenching process was involved in PSII protection during greening in the presence of DCMU. Metabolic inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration were used to examine how the change in cellular energy balance regulates the greening process. Apparently, the mitochondrion acts to supply energy to the chloroplast during greening, and inhibition of mitochondrial respiration diminishes chlorophyll accumulation apparently through an increase in the redox state of the plastoquinone pool.  相似文献   

13.
Twenty-five years ago, non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence by oxidised plastoquinone (PQ) was proposed to be responsible for the lowering of the maximum fluorescence yield reported to occur when leaves or chloroplasts were treated in the dark with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), an inhibitor of electron flow beyond the primary quinone electron acceptor (QA) of photosystem (PS) II [C. Vernotte, A.L. Etienne, J.-M. Briantais, Quenching of the system II chlorophyll fluorescence by the plastoquinone pool, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 545 (1979) 519-527]. Since then, the notion of PQ-quenching has received support but has also been put in doubt, due to inconsistent experimental findings. In the present study, the possible role of the native PQ-pool as a non-photochemical quencher was reinvestigated, employing measurements of the fast chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics (from 50 μs to 5 s). The about 20% lowering of the maximum fluorescence yield FM, observed in osmotically broken spinach chloroplasts treated with DCMU, was eliminated when the oxidised PQ-pool was non-photochemically reduced to PQH2 by dark incubation of the samples in the presence of NAD(P)H, both under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Incubation under anaerobic conditions in the absence of NAD(P)H had comparatively minor effects. In DCMU-treated samples incubated in the presence of NAD(P)H fluorescence quenching started to develop again after 20-30 ms of illumination, i.e., the time when PQH2 starts getting reoxidised by PS I activity. NAD(P)H-dependent restoration of FM was largely, if not completely, eliminated when the samples were briefly (5 s) pre-illuminated with red or far-red light. Addition to the incubation medium of HgCl2 that inhibits dark reduction of PQ by NAD(P)H also abolished NAD(P)H-dependent restoration of FM. Collectively, our results provide strong new evidence for the occurrence of PQ-quenching. The finding that DCMU alone did not affect the minimum fluorescence yield F0 allowed us to calculate, for different redox states of the native PQ-pool, the fractional quenching at the F0 level (Q0) and to compare it with the fractional quenching at the FM level (QM). The experimentally determined Q0/QM ratios were found to be equal to the corresponding F0/FM ratios, demonstrating that PQ-quenching is solely exerted on the excited state of antenna chlorophylls.  相似文献   

14.
Light modulation of the ability of three artificial quinones, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone (DCBQ), and tetramethyl-p-benzoquinone (duroquinone), to quench chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence photochemically or non-photochemically was studied to simulate the functions of endogenous plastoquinones during the thermal phase of fast Chl fluorescence induction kinetics. DBMIB was found to suppress by severalfold the basal level of Chl fluorescence (F(o)) and to markedly retard the light-induced rise of variable fluorescence (F(v)). After irradiation with actinic light, Chl fluorescence rapidly dropped down to the level corresponding to F(o) level in untreated thylakoids and then slowly declined to the initial level. DBMIB was found to be an efficient photochemical quencher of energy in Photosystem II (PSII) in the dark, but not after prolonged irradiation. Those events were owing to DBMIB reduction under light and its oxidation in the dark. At high concentrations, DCBQ exhibited quenching behaviours similar to those of DBMIB. In contrast, duroquinone demonstrated the ability to quench F(v) at low concentration, while F(o) was declined only at high concentrations of this artificial quinone. Unlike for DBMIB and DCBQ, quenched F(o) level was attained rapidly after actinic light had been turned off in the presence of high duroquinone concentrations. That finding evidenced that the capacity of duroquinone to non-photochemically quench excitation energy in PSII was maintained during irradiation, which is likely owing to the rapid electron transfer from duroquinol to Photosystem I (PSI). It was suggested that DBMIB and DCBQ at high concentration, on the one hand, and duroquinone, on the other hand, mimic the properties of plastoquinones as photochemical and non-photochemical quenchers of energy in PSII under different conditions. The first model corresponds to the conditions under which the plastoquinone pool can be largely reduced (weak electron release from PSII to PSI compared to PSII-driven electron flow from water under strong light and weak PSI photochemical capacity because of inactive electron transport on its reducing side), while the second one mimics the behaviour of the plastoquinone pool when it cannot be filled up with electrons (weak or moderate light and high photochemical competence of PSI).  相似文献   

15.
B.R. Velthuys  J. Amesz 《BBA》1974,333(1):85-94
A study was made of the reactions between the primary and secondary electron acceptors of Photosystem 2 by measurements of the increase of chlorophyll fluorescence induced in darkness by dithionite or by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). The experiments were done either with chloroplasts to which hydroxylamine or carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP) was added, or with chloroplasts treated with tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris) to which phenylenediamine and ascorbate were added as donor system. Under these conditions the fluorescence increase induced by dithionite or DCMU added after illumination with short light flashes was dependent on the flash number with a periodicity of two; it was large after an uneven number of flashes, and small after a long darktime or after an even number of flashes. The results are interpreted in terms of a model which involves a hypothetical electron carrier situated between Q and plastoquinone; this electron carrier is thought to equilibrate with plastoquinone in a two-electron transfer reaction; the results obtained with DCMU are explained by assuming that its midpoint potential is lowered by this inhibitor.  相似文献   

16.
Ranunculus glacialis leaves were tested for their plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) content and electron flow to photorespiration and to alternative acceptors. In shade‐leaves, the PTOX and NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH) content were markedly lower than in sun‐leaves. Carbon assimilation/light and Ci response curves were not different in sun‐ and shade‐leaves, but photosynthetic capacity was the highest in sun‐leaves. Based on calculation of the apparent specificity factor of ribulose 1·5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), the magnitude of alternative electron flow unrelated to carboxylation and oxygenation of Rubisco correlated to the PTOX content in sun‐, shade‐ and growth chamber‐leaves. Similarly, fluorescence induction kinetics indicated more complete and more rapid reoxidation of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool in sun‐ than in shade‐leaves. Blocking electron flow to assimilation, photorespiration and the Mehler reaction with appropriate inhibitors showed that sun‐leaves were able to maintain higher electron flow and PQ oxidation. The results suggest that PTOX can act as a safety valve in R. glacialis leaves under conditions where incident photon flux density (PFD) exceeds the growth PFD and under conditions where the plastoquinone pool is highly reduced. Such conditions can occur frequently in alpine climates due to rapid light and temperature changes.  相似文献   

17.
The oxygen exchange, obtained when isolated chloroplasts of Triticum aestivum, wheat, are irradiated without the addition of a Hill oxidant has been investigated using an oxygen electrode. Ascorbate, catalase, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone(DBMIB), diethyldithio-carbamate (DEDT), dichlorophenylmethylurea (DCMU), and potassium cyanide were added to the Chloroplasts in order to investigate the oxygen exchange. At least two oxygen uptake reactions, one sensitive to catalase and one catalase-insensitive, appeared upon irradiation. Hydrogen peroxide was the product of the oxygen uptake in the former process, and water was the reductant. The formation of hydrogen peroxide was probably associated with photosystem I. The other oxygen consuming reaction was found to be insensitive to both catalase and potassium cyanide. After the chloroplasts had been treated with DCMU, it was possible to show that the catalase-insensitive oxygen uptake was localized in photosystem I, and that a cyclic electron transport system or some endogenous reductant (-s) acted in the oxygen uptake. Addition of ascorbate or DEDT to the chloroplasts led to an enhanced oxygen uptake in 710 nm light. This was probably due to the effect of these compounds on the superoxide radical ion formed in photosystem I. The stimulated oxygen uptake was only weakly affected by catalase, indicating that hydrogen peroxide was not a product of this oxygen uptake. Addition of DEDT and potassium cyanide inhibited (strongly respectively weakly) the oxygen uptake when photosystem II was functioning. The effect of these compounds was probably due to an inhibition of the electron transport at the plastocyanin. DBMIB inhibited the oxygen uptake reactions and the cooperation between the two photosystems. The cooperation between the photosystems was also studied in DCMU-treated chloroplasts. The reactions in photosystem II, measured as oxygen evolution, were more inhibited than the coupling between the photosystems. The oxygen “gush” appearing upon irradiation in light of 650 nm was not affected by a DBMIB-treatment, showing that the oxygen evolution was due to the reduction of plastoquinone. The reoxidation in the dark of the plastoquinone pool was stimulated by DBMIB and potassium cyanide indicating that an oxygen uptake could be associated with plastoquinone. The sites of interaction of oxygen with the electron transport pathways in chloroplasts, and the different reductants for the oxygen consuming reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The psbEFLJ operon of tobacco plastids encodes four bitopic low molecular mass transmembrane components of photosystem II. Here, we report the effect of inactivation of psbL on the directional forward electron flow of photosystem II as compared to that of the wild type and the psbJ deletion mutant, which is impaired in PSII electron flow to plastoquinone [Regel et al. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 41473-41478]. Exposure of Delta psbL plants to a saturating light pulse gives rise to the maximal fluorescence emission, Fm(L), which is followed within 4-6 s by a broader hitherto not observed second fluorescence peak in darkness, Fm(D). Conditions either facilitating oxidation or avoiding reduction of the plastoquinone pool do not affect the Fm(L) level of Delta psbL plants but prevent the appearance of Fm(D). The level of Fm(D) is proportional to the intensity and duration of the light pulse allowing reduction of the plastoquinone pool in dark-adapted leaves prior to the activation of PSI and oxidation of plastoquinol. Lowering the temperature decreases the Fm(D) level in the Delta psbL mutant, whereas it increases considerably the lifetime of Q(A)*- in the Delta psbJ mutant. The thermoluminescence signal generated by Q(A)*-/S(2) charge recombination is not affected; on the other hand, charge recombination of Q(B)*-/S(2,3) could not be detected in Delta psbL plants. PSII is highly sensitive to photoinhibition in Delta psbL. We conclude that PsbL prevents reduction of PSII by back electron flow from plastoquinol protecting PSII from photoinactivation, whereas PsbJ regulates forward electron flow from Q(A)*- to the plastoquinone pool. Therefore, both proteins contribute substantially to ensure unidirectional forward electron flow from PSII to the plastoquinone pool.  相似文献   

19.
M. Hodges  J. Barber 《Planta》1983,157(2):166-173
A study of pea plants grown at different light intensities has been made. Using a leaf oxygen electrode, it was shown that plants grown under low light intensities had lower saturated rates of photosynthesis than high-light-grown plants however, at low light intensities the photosynthetic rates were similar for both types of plants. State 1- State 2 transitions have been monitored with attached leaves using a modulated fluorescence technique. It is shown that peas grown under low light intensities (20 W m-2) had a faster State 1 to State 2 transition when compared with medium-(50 W m-2) and high-(70 W m-2) light-grown plants. Measurement of fast-fluorescence-induction curves in the absence of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) have shown that low-light plants are, when in State 1, more effective at using Photosystem-two (PSII) light to reduce their plastoquinone pool than high-light plants. Transition from State 1 to State 2 for all plants led to a decrease in the reduction level of the plastoquinone pool inidcating that the transition had increased electron flow through Photosystem one (PSI) relative to PSII. Analyses of fast fluorescence induction in the presence of DCMU indicate that low-light-grown plants have a higher PSII-α/PSII-β ratio than high-light-grown plants. Such a difference is in line with the increase in the PSII/PSI ratio of low-light plants and is reflected in their high chlorophyll b/chlorophyll a ratio and their larger appressed to non-appressed thylakoid-membrane areas. It is suggested that these two latter factors give rise to the faster State 1 - State 2 transitions in low-light plants.  相似文献   

20.
High light treatments were given to attached leaves of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) at room temperature and at 1°C where the diffusion- and enzyme-dependent repair processes of Photosystem II are at a minimum. After treatments, electron transfer activities and fluorescence induction were measured from thylakoids isolated from the treated leaves. When the photoinhibition treatment was given at 1°C, the Photosystem II electron transfer assays that were designed to require electron transfer to the plastoquinone pool showed greater inhibition than electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone, which measures all PS II centers. When the light treatment was given at room temperature, electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone was inhibited more than whole-chain electron transfer. Variable fluorescence measured in the presence of ferricyanide decreased only during room-temperature treatments. These results suggest that reaction centers of one pool of Photosystem II, non-QB-PS II, replace photoinhibited reaction centers at room temperature, while no replacement occurs at 1°C. A simulation of photoinhibition at 1°C supports this conclusion.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4,-dichlorophenyl)-1,1,-dimethylurea - DCPIP dichlorophenol-indophenol (2,6-dichloro-4((4-hydroxyphenyl)imino)-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one) - DPC diphenyl carbazide (2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide) - FeCN ferricyanide (hexacyanoferrate(III)) - app apparent quantum yield of photosynthetic oxygen evolution - MV methyl viologen (1,1-dimethyl-4,4-bipyridinium dichloride) - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - PQ pool plastoquinone - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - RT room temperature - WC whole chain electron transfer  相似文献   

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